As an undergraduate, Weinstock earned a degree in business
administration. Over 60-plus years, Weinstock and his wife, Jane, remained heavily
involved in philanthropy at Lehigh after graduation, donating more than $10 million to Lehigh
for various uses.

Aside from the Weinstock Center, the Weinstocks started an
endowed scholarship fund, as well as an artist-in-residence program, for the
music department, established an endowed chairperson position in the art and
architecture program, and helped fund a restoration project for the President's
House. The gate leading to the president's house is even fondly named "Luke's
Gate."

"When I was at Lehigh, I had the pleasure of being at
the president's house, and I was in awe of it," Weinstock said of the
President's House during an interview with The
Morning Call in 1999. "I remember it being a very grand structure, and
I wanted to make sure it stayed that way."

Notable visitors to The Weinstock Center have included Thomas Friedman, author and columnist for The New York Times; Marty Baron, editor in chief of The Boston Globe; and Imad Musa, producer for Al-Jazeera.

Weinstock was buried Thursday in Queens, N.Y., and his
obituary will appear in The New York
Times. He was 97.